The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Stop Using inclined sleepers, feds warn
Consumers should stop using all inclined sleepers — even models that have not been recalled — because of the risk of accidental suffocation, federal safety regulators said Friday.
What happened
The warning from the Consumer Product Safety Commission comes after months of controversy over the popular infant-sleeping devices, which began in April with the recall of millions of Fisher-Price’s Rock ’n Plays because of safety concerns and culminated in the release of a study two weeks ago that found the product’s design inherently dangerous.
The CPSC’s new warning applies to any sleeping device that allows babies to sleep at an angle greater than 10 degrees. Most inclined sleepers stood at about 30 degrees.
Why it matters
The new CPSC warning is not a recall. It is the agency’s response to a growing body of research about the safety of inclined sleepers and a surge in the number of deaths associated with the products. The agency said there were fewer than 40 deaths tied to the products in April. Now that number has shot up to 73 infant deaths.
The American Academy of Pediatrics for several years has said inclined sleepers are unsafe. The group recommends that babies sleep on a flat surface in a crib or bassinet. Prolonged sleep in bouncers or infant car seats is also not recommended.
The CPSC had been worried about deaths in inclined sleepers for at least a year before the Rock ’n Play recall earlier this year. But agency staff struggled to explain why babies were dying in the product.
Last month, a new study by University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences researchers found that babies are especially susceptible to suffocation in an inclined sleeper because the product makes it easier for babies to roll into an unsafe facedown position.
What’s next
The CPSC is also pushing for new federal rules that would essentially outlaw inclined sleepers by limiting the incline to 10 degrees. But the rulemaking process is expected to take at least several months.
In the interim, the agency is advising parents to avoid the products.